Gregory J. Mize and David R. Morris
In mammals, control of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) translation is one component of a feedback network that regulates intracellular levels of the polyamines, spermidine and spermine. AdoMetDC mRNA from mammals contains a highly conserved open reading frame (uORF) within its leader sequence that confers polyamine-regulated suppression of translation on the associated downstream cistron. This regulation is mediated through an interaction that depends on the amino acid sequence of the uORF-encoded hexapeptide. It remains to be shown whether polyamines participate directly in this interaction or indirectly through a specialized signal transduction pathway.
In this paper, we show that Saccharomyces cerevisiae does not have a
uORF associated with its AdoMetDC gene (SPE2) and that ribosome
loading on the SPE2 mRNA is not positively influenced by polyamine
depletion, as it is in mammalian cells. Nevertheless, the mammalian
AdoMetDC uORF, when introduced into a polyamine auxotroph of yeast, conferred
polyamine regulation of both translational efficiency and ribosome loading
on the associated mRNA. This regulatory activity depended on the
amino acid sequence encoded by the fourth and fifth codons of the uORF,
as in mammalian cells. The fact that the regulatory properties of
this mammalian translational control element are quite similar in both
mammalian and yeast cells suggests that a specialized signal transduction
pathway is not required. Rather, it seems likely that polyamines
may be directly participating in an interaction between the uORF-encoded
peptide and a constitutive component of the translation machinery, which
leads to inhibition of ribosome activity.